21 OpenSSL Examples to Help You in Real-World

One of the most popular commands in SSL to create, convert, manage the SSL Certificates is OpenSSL. There will be many situations where you have to deal with OpenSSL in various ways and here I have listed them for you as a handy cheat sheet.

In this article, I will talk about frequently used OpenSSL commands to help you in the real world.

Some of the abbreviations related to certificates.

SSL – Secure Socket Layer

CSR – Certificate Signing Request

TLS – Transport Layer Security

PEM – Privacy Enhanced Mail

DER – Distinguished Encoding Rules

SHA – Secure Hash Algorithm

PKCS – Public-Key Cryptography Standards

1. Create new Private Key and Certificate Signing Request

Above command will generate CSR and 2048-bit RSA key file. If you intend to use this certificate in Apache or Nginx then you need to send this CSR file to certificate issuer authority and they will give you signed certificate mostly in der or pem format which you need to configure in Apache or Nginx web server.

3. Verify CSR file

Verification is important to ensure you are sending CSR to issuer authority with required details.

4. Create RSA Private Key

openssl genrsa -out private.key 2048

If you just need to generate RSA private key, you can use above command. I have included 2048 for stronger encryption.

5. Remove Passphrase from Key

openssl rsa -in certkey.key -out nopassphrase.key

If you are using passphrase in key file and using Apache then every time you start, you have to enter the password. If you are annoyed with entering password then you can use above openssl rsa -in geekflare.key -check to remove the passphrase key from existing key.

6. Verify Private Key

openssl rsa -in certkey.key –check

If you doubt on your key file, you can use above command to check.

7. Verify Certificate File

openssl x509 -in certfile.pem -text –noout

If you would like to validate certificate data like CN, OU, etc then you can use above command which will give you certificate details.

8. Verify the Certificate Signer Authority

openssl x509 -in certfile.pem -noout -issuer -issuer_hash

Certificate issuer authority signs every certificate and in case you need to check them, you can use above command.

9. Check Hash Value of A Certificate

openssl x509 -noout -hash -in bestflare.pem

10. Convert DER to PEM format

openssl x509 –inform der –in sslcert.der –out sslcert.pem

Usually, certificate authority will give you SSL cert in .der format and if you need to use them in apache or .pem format, you can use above command to convert them.

13. Create CSR using existing private key

If you don’t want to create a new private key instead using existing one, you can with above command.

14. Check contents of PKCS12 format cert

openssl pkcs12 –info –nodes –in cert.p12

PKCS12 is binary format so you won’t be able to view the content in notepad or another editor. So you got to use above command to view the contents of PKCS12 format file.

15. Convert PKCS12 format to PEM certificate

openssl pkcs12 –in cert.p12 –out cert.pem

If you wish to use existing pkcs12 format with Apache or just in pem format, this will be useful.

16. Test SSL certificate of particular URL

openssl s_client -connect yoururl.com:443 –showcerts

I use this quite often to validate the SSL certificate of particular URL from the server. This is very handy to validate the protocol, cipher, and cert details.

17. Find out OpenSSL version

openssl version

If you are responsible for ensuring OpenSSL is secure then probably one of the first things you got to do is to verify the version.

Check PEM File Certificate Expiration Date

openssl x509 -noout -in certificate.pem -dates

Useful if you are planning to put some kind of monitoring to check the validity. It will show you date in notBefore and notAfter syntax. notAfter is one you will have to verify to confirm if a certificate is expired or still valid.

21. Verify if particular cipher is accepted on URL

If you are working on security findings and pen test results show some of the weak ciphers is accepted then to validate, you can use above command. Off course, you will have to change the cipher and URL, which you want to test against.

If mentioned cipher is accepted then you will get “CONNECTED” else “handshake failure”.

I hope above commands help you to know more about OpenSSL to manage SSL certificates for your website.

Hi Experts,
Now am working on SSL renewal certs installation in PROD:
This is regarding vignette application:
when am trying to verify the certificate i got wrong OUTPUT as fallows by this command\
/usr/sfw/bin/openssl verify -CAfile /apps/vcmldap/openldap/certs/vgncert_cacert.pem /apps/vcmldap/openldap/certs/vgncert.pem